c. The World Wide Web Consortium --with the "3" in "W3C"
superscripted--is the organization whose goal is to guide HTML's future. Netscape,
Microsoft, Adobe, and many other key Web companies are members.

d, but mostly b. When you specify the size of an image
in the HTML page, the text loads right away so the visitor can read the copy
as the images continue to slowly load.

c. Deprecated tags are not yet obsolete; instead they're
the next step away from it, according to the W3C. You can still use deprecated
tags with no problem.

c. Non-browser safe colors are only a problem on 256-color
monitors.

c. Netscape transformed the Web by developing these
and other "extensions" that let folks add some much needed formatting to their
pages. Most of these tags and attributes (BLINK is the most notable exception)
are now part of the standard HTML specifications.

b. Marc Andreessen began his Web odyssey with the National
Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois.
After working on Mosaic, the first wildly popular browser, he left to create
Netscape Communications, which was recently bought by AOL.